Abstract:
This paper is a qualitative analysis of the cultural notion of the “mestiza” daughter
and of the way the lines of transborder matrilineage spread through Rebecca
Walker’s Black, White and Jewish. The cultural ‘Mestizas’ try to strike a balance in
between their insider and outsider status in the society for then coming to terms
with their multiple identities and adopting the role of cultural ambassadors. In this
autobiography Rebecca Walker is revealed transforming herself from a rebellious
black adolescent living with her mother in the bohemia of San Francisco to an upper
middle class Jewish girl living with her father and her stepmother in the suburbs of
Manhattan. Shuttling between coasts and cultures makes Walker feel a “movement
child” psychologically, physically and politically. At times feeling completely at home
in her mother’ s world, other times going through disruption from the mother as a
way of waging war on her search for identity, Rebecca maps up her identity through
the “Mestiza Daughter” and the “Cultural Electra” trope.
Literally traveling between two or more worlds and developing a tolerance for
contradictions and plurality, the “Mestiza” is involved in self-negotiations and
mediations that make her side with the dominant culture instead of identifying
with the matrilineal heritage or becoming a cultural replica of the Electra complex.
Typical of the matrilineal relationship in Rebecca Walker’ s Black, White and Jewish
is the matrophobic rejection of the mother’s peculiarities and the desire to become
purged once and for all from the remnants of her culture. Considering her mother
as the inner scapegoat and the inherent blemish, Rebecca recognizes failure
to live up to the societal standards of good mothering and turns to her father as
a point of reference for her life. Nevertheless, there seems to be no place for a
biracial, multiethnic daughter in the xenophobic society of the father, and this makes
Rebecca decide to discharge the father’s surname and highlight the mother’s one
as a sign of privileging blackness and downplaying whiteness. Walker’s perpetually
shifting locations create a narrative that partakes of fact and iction, fantasy and
experience, storytelling and collective unconscious, and present the protagonist
as a compulsory amnesiac absorbed in the shapelessness of identity, time and
location.
Absorbed in an existence which is void of daily routines, and inding permanence only in the transitional accommodation of airports, Rebecca will claim and disclaim
separate parts of her character in every new location periodically moving from
the East Coast to the West Coast, from the white Jewish suburbia to the black
artist bohemia, from the white outsiderhood to the black insiderhood. Stylistically
speaking the author has intentionally capitalized Home because no conventionality
of space or attitude can deserve that name. She feels content with an off the map
position and as a mediator.
Rejecting the existence of a stabilized and uniied identity and considering herself
the tragic mulatta caught between both worlds like a proverbial deer in the headlights,
Walker grows aware of her binary marginality and asserts that identity emerges not
when identification is made, but when it fails to be made. The sense of multiplicity
conferred by Jewishness refers to the potential to transcend dichotomies such as
black and white and leave other facets unarticulated.